| Literature DB >> 32727397 |
Une Elisabeth Stømer1,2, Astrid Klopstad Wahl3, Lasse Gunnar Gøransson4,5, Kristin Hjorthaug Urstad6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with chronic kidney disease make day-to-day decisions about how to self-manage their disease. Chronic kidney disease (CKD) includes a risk for progression towards end-stage renal disease and the development of comorbidities, such as cardiovascular disease, which represents the leading cause of death among these patients. To reduce these risks, CKD patients are recommended to follow a healthy lifestyle with physical activity, food and fluid restrictions, and adherence to complex medication regimes throughout all phases of the disease. To manage the complexity of this health situation, health literacy (HL) is considered essential. The current prevailing understanding is that HL is a multidimensional concept and comprises a range of cognitive, affective, social, and personal skills that determine the motivation and ability to gain access to, understand, and use health information. Recently, we investigated multiple aspects of HL in CKD patients in a quantitative cross-sectional study utilizing the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) and observed that finding good health information and appraising health information were the most challenging aspects of HL. This study aimed to explore CKD patients' lived experiences of different dimensions of HL presented in the HLQ.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic kidney disease; Health literacy; Patients’ experiences; Qualitative study
Year: 2020 PMID: 32727397 PMCID: PMC7392653 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-020-01973-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Participant characteristics, n = 12
| Age in years, Median (range) | 66 (41–80) |
| Females, No. (%) | 6 (50) |
| CKD stage, No. (%) | |
| 3 | 5 (42) |
| 4 and 5, not on dialysis | 4 (33) |
| 5, on hemodialysis | 3 (25) |
| Level of HL, No. (%) | |
| Low HL | 5 (42) |
| Medium HL | 3 (25) |
| High HL | 4 (33) |
| Living alone, No. (%) | 5 (42) |
| Duration of known CKD in months, Median (range) | 52 (3–259) |
| Presence of comorbidity, No. (%) | 6 (50) |
CKD chronic kidney disease, HL health literacy
Semistructured interview guide
| 1 | - What do you think of your knowledge of CKD? |
| 2 | - How do you get information about your kidney disease? |
| 3 | - What do you do if you cannot understand the information you get? - How do you appraise health information/consider whether health information is relevant to you? - What do you do if you get conflicting recommendations from healthcare providers/others with relevance to your health? |
| 4 | - Can you describe how you navigate the healthcare system? - How do you know when to seek medical assistance? - How do you know who/where to contact? - How do you manage your kidney disease daily (i.e., diet, medications, lifestyle)? |
| 5 | - How do you experience collaboration with healthcare professionals in general? - What do you think about the importance of support from healthcare professionals to manage your disease? |
| 6 | - Can you explain the role that family and friends have concerning you living with CKD? Others of relevance (peers, others)? |
| 7 | - Is there anything we should talk about related to how you are handling CKD that we have not talked about already? |
CKD chronic kidney disease
Examples of the analytic process, including full citations, initial codes, subthemes, and themes
| Citations/raw data | Initial codes | Subthemes | Themes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chooses not to familiarize herself with CKD; the nephrologist has her under surveillance, and she does not need to ask questions or think about it. | Passive health information receiver | Variation in people’s attitudes and behavior as health information seekers | |
| Obtains some information from the nephrologist and seeks additional information online. | Active health information seeker | ||
| The specialists pass off the responsibility; it is difficult to know which specialist to consult. | The problem of fragmented healthcare in the context of multimorbidity makes the healthcare system challenging to navigate | ||
| Good connection with the healthcare provider makes it easy to ask about every concern. | The value of a good relationship with healthcare providers |